| Literature DB >> 29457970 |
Legna Figueroa-Cosme1, Kyle D Gilroy2, Tung-Han Yang2, Madeline Vara1, Jinho Park1, Shixiong Bao2, Anderson G M da Silva2, Younan Xia1,2,3.
Abstract
Shape-controlled synthesis of colloidal metal nanocrystals has traditionally relied on the use of an approach that involves the reduction of a metal precursor by a single reductant. Once the concentration of atoms surpasses supersaturation, they will undergo homogeneous nucleation to generate nuclei and then seeds, followed by further growth into nanocrystals. In general, it is a grand challenge to optimize such an approach because the kinetic requirement for nucleation tends to be drastically different from what is needed to guide the growth process. In this work, we overcome this difficulty by switching to a dual-reductant approach, in which both strong and weak reductants are added into the same reaction solution. By controlling their amounts to program the reduction kinetics, the strong reductant only regulates the homogeneous nucleation process to generate the desired seeds, and once consumed, the weak reductant takes over to control the growth pattern and thereby the shape of the resulting nanocrystals.Entities:
Keywords: kinetics; nanocrystals; nucleation; palladium; reduction
Year: 2018 PMID: 29457970 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201705720
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236